Electric Flux/Gauss' Law

A point charge [tex]q_{1} = 4.15 \times 10^-6 [/tex] is located on the x-axis at x = 1.80 m, and a second point charge [tex]q_{2} = -5.80 \times 10^-6[/tex] C is on the y-axis at y = 1.10 m. What is the total electric flux due to these two point charges through a spherical surface centered at the origin and with radius r = 1.45 m?
Take the permittivity of free space to be [tex] 8.85 \times 10^{-12}\:{\rm C}^{2}/{\rm N \cdot m}^{2}.[/tex]

I know I'm wrong because this hw's online and I got it wrong, and I loose points for every wrong answer suckily. Well the units for q were nanocoulombs which I changed to coulombs and then epsilon naught is [tex] {\rm C}^{2}/{\rm N \cdot {m}}^{2} [/tex]. So they cancel out do give [tex] {\rm N \cdot m}^{2}/ \rm C} [/tex]

crap... I used the wrong changing of units it [tex] 1 \cdot 10^{-9} [/tex] coulombs per nanocoulombs... not -6.

Thanks solo.

Well, that was easy on me... As a suggestion, when you present a problem in the forum, type it in exactly as it appeared originally. That would have made the SI prefix error easy to spot. Your method was correct!